Abiotic stress tolerance of coastal accessions of a promising forage species, trifolium fragiferum

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Abstract

Crop wild relatives are valuable as a genetic resource to develop new crop cultivars, better adapted to increasing environmental heterogeneity and being able to give high quality yields in a changing climate. The aim of the study was to evaluate the tolerance of different accessions of a crop wild relative, Trifolium fragiferum L., from coastal habitats of the Baltic Sea to three abiotic factors (increased soil moisture, trampling, cutting) in controlled conditions. Seeds from four accessions of T. fragiferum, collected in the wild, were used for experiments, and cv. ‘Palestine’ was used as a reference genotype. Plants were cultivated in asymbiotic conditions of soil culture. Treatments were performed in a quantifiable way, with three gradations for soil moisture (optimum, waterlogged, flooded) and four gradations for both trampling and cutting. All accessions had relatively high tolerance against increased soil moisture, trampling, and cutting, but significant accession-specific differences in tolerance to individual factors were clearly evident, indicating that the studied wild accessions represented different ecotypes of the species. Several wild accessions of T. fragiferum showed stress tolerance-related features superior to these of cv. ‘Palestine’, but TF1 was the most tolerant accession, with a very high score against both waterlogging and cutting, and a high score against trampling.

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Andersone-Ozola, U., Jēkabsone, A., Purmale, L., Romanovs, M., & Ievinsh, G. (2021). Abiotic stress tolerance of coastal accessions of a promising forage species, trifolium fragiferum. Plants, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10081552

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